Medicine Buddha Teachings

Medicine Buddha Teachings

MEDICINE BUDDHA TEACHINGS MEDICINE BUDDHA TEACHINGS by Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche Oral Translation by Lama Yeshe Gyamtso Introduced, Edited, and Annotated by Lama Tashi Namgyal Snow Lion Publications Ithaca, New York ) Boulder, Colorado Snow Lion Publications P.O. Box 6483 Ithaca, NY 14851 (607) 273-8519 www.snowlionpub.com Copyright © 2004 Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche and Kagyu Shenpen Ösel Chöling All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced by any means without prior written permission from the publisher. Printed in Canada on acid-free recycled paper. ISBN --- Cataloging-in-Publication Data available from the Library of Congress CONTENTS INTRODUCTION vii PART ONE THE MEDICINE BUDDHA SADHANA TEACHINGS 1. A Practice That Is Extremely Effective in the Removal of Sickness 3 2. The Great King of Medicine Is Active in Pacifying the Suffering of Beings 13 3. The Visualization Uncovers the Inherent Purity of Phenomena 27 4. Because of Its Vastness, Offering the Entire Universe Produces Great Merit 40 5. On the Origin of Auspiciousness in the Substances and Symbols 53 PART TWO MEDICINE BUDDHA SADHANA IN TIBETAN AND ENGLISH 69 PART THREE THE MEDICINE BUDDHA SUTRA 1. Twelve Extraordinary Aspirations for the Benefit of Sentient Beings 105 2. The Buddha Shakyamuni Taught This Sutra to Inspire Us to Practice 113 3. Mudras, or Ritual Gestures, Help to Clarify the Visualization 125 4. The Benefits of Hearing and Recollecting the Medicine Buddha’s Name 139 5. Regular Supplication of the Medicine Buddha Brings Protection 146 6. The Correct View Regarding Both Deities and Maras 158 7. Somehow Our Buddha Nature Has Been Awakened, and We Are Very Fortunate Indeed 172 PART FOUR THE TWELVE GREAT ASPIRATIONS OF THE MEDICINE BUDDHA 177 NOTES 183 APPENDIX MEDICINE BUDDHA SADHANA WITH TIBETAN 193 INTRODUCTION CCORDING TO THE TEACHINGS OF THE BUDDHA SHAKYAMUNI, re- corded in the Sutra on Entering the Womb, there are four classes of A illness. The first includes illnesses which are relatively inconse- quential, and from these illnesses one will recover whether or not one takes medicines. The second class of illness includes more serious, even dangerous, ill- nesses, but if one takes the appropriate medicines, one will recover from these as well. A modern update of this category would surely include many effective modern medical procedures, such as acupuncture, surgery, radia- tion therapy, chemotherapy, etc. The third class of illness includes those for which medicines are of no use, illnesses from which one cannot recover simply through the use of medicines or other medical procedures. These illnesses, however, can be cured, and one can thereby recover one’s health, through the practice of appropriate spiritual techniques taught in the buddhadharma. The fourth class of illness includes those which have a karmicly deter- mined irreversibly terminal nature. When one’s body manifests such an illness, death is inevitable and no amount of medicine or medical proce- dure can prevent it. In fact, the use of medicines in such cases—with the exception of narcotics for pain—only serves to increase one’s suffering. The teachings on the Medicine Buddha which follow in these pages, given by the extraordinary Tibetan meditation master and scholar Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche, are intended most particularly for those who are suf- fering from the third class of illness, illnesses for which no successful medi- cal treatment has been found, but which are still curable through the practice of profound spiritual techniques. In the Buddhist tradition the most no- table of these techniques are the spiritual practices associated with the Medi- cine Buddha. Through such practices, the innate healing powers inherent in the basic nature of all sentient beings can be uncovered and accessed. In viii MEDICINE BUDDHA TEACHINGS this way sick persons can cure themselves of the illnesses that medicines and medical procedures are unable to cure. As normal human beings we have a tendency to think that illnesses are physically based and require physical solutions. Therefore, it is reasonable to ask how it is possible that spiritual practice can help the body cure itself. This question becomes even more critical for those who have no faith in the miraculous powers of a creator god. But if one has confidence in or even an intimation of any kind of spiritual reality that transcends the limi- tations of a strictly material universe, then one will find oneself extremely interested in the answer to this question provided by the Buddhist tradi- tion. In the vajrayana tradition of Buddhism, we would answer this question —how one can cure oneself through spiritual practice—from two perspec- tives: from the perspective of the ultimate truth of the nature of reality, and from the perspective of relative truths, which discuss how things appear to us when we have not yet realized the ultimate truth of the nature of reality. From the standpoint of ultimate truth, all phenomena, including all the phenomena that we misapprehend as physical matter, are empty of any inherent existence. Though they appear to be very solid and real to us, they are in truth mere illusory appearances lacking any substantial reality, like a light show in space, like the aurora borealis, a rainbow, an echo, a flash of lightning, a mirage, a magical display, a dream, an hallucination, like the images in movies and on television, or like the reflection of the moon in water. None of these illusory appearances, including what we take to be matter, have any true, separate, permanent, solid or substantial existence independent of ever-changing equally non-existent causes and conditions. When scientists today investigate and scrutinize the atoms which we for centuries have thought of as the building blocks of the material world, they find no indivisible and, therefore, permanent particles of matter. They find mostly space with variously described sorts of energies rushing around within it. These energies are also insubstantial, impermanent, and unpredictable. They cannot be said to have any kind of permanent existence. The more scientists investigate, the more illusory the nature of matter appears. The Buddha discovered this same truth in meditation 2,500 years ago, and the Buddhist tradition has been teaching it ever since. All phenomena are ephemeral, constantly changing in the same way as the appearances within a kaleidoscope constantly change. None of these INTRODUCTION ix illusory appearances—including the appearances of sickness and disease, which are also mere empty appearances—have the power to cause us suffer- ing unless we mistakenly apprehend them as real and substantial. When we misapprehend these appearances, when we take them to be real, we fixate on them and thereby cause them to solidify in our experience. This gives them the appearance of solid, substantial reality, and then in our lives these illnesses do, in fact, become for us very real and solid, and we suffer from them. Still, though everything that we experience is empty of any kind of substantial existence, we still experience something. What is it that we ex- perience? We experience mind. In discussing the nature of things, or the nature of appearances, which in the ultimate analysis are merely empty, insubstantial radiations or light- manifestations of an equally empty and insubstantial, though luminous, mind, Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche expresses the teachings of the Buddha given 2,500 years ago in the third turning of the wheel of dharma, his third great cycle of teachings: Before meditating, before recognizing things to be as they are, one will have seen the radiance of this mind as solid external things that are sources of pleasure and pain. But through practicing medi- tation, and through coming to recognize things as they are, you will come to see that all of these appearances are merely the display or radiance or light of the mind which experiences them. When one is able truly to recognize sickness and disease as “merely the display or radiance or light of the mind which experiences them,” empty of any inherent substantial existence, then one’s suffering disappears. Regard- less of which of the first three categories of illness one is suffering from, if one is able to recognize its true nature — that it is merely the empty magi- cal display or radiance or light of the mind which experiences it — one will experience no suffering, and depending on the level and completeness of this realization, one’s illness will dissolve in the empty pure primordial ex- panse, and one will be cured. Even if one is afflicted by the fourth category of illness and it is karmicly inevitable that one will die from that particular illness, one will die without suffering or fear, because all phenomena, in- cluding illness, are empty. They lack any kind of substantial, permanent x MEDICINE BUDDHA TEACHINGS reality independent of equally empty and interdependent causes and con- ditions. They are all merely insubstantial, ever-changing, kaleidoscopic light shows in the primordially pure open expanse of empty luminous aware- ness. This is the view of illness and disease from the standpoint of ultimate truth, and it is very useful and helpful to understand. It must be remem- bered, however, that ultimate truth can never be accurately expressed through words and conceptual constructs. Words and concepts, even the verbal con- cept “ultimate truth,” can never be more than “the finger pointing at the moon.” They are not “the moon” itself. Ultimate truth ultimately is inex- pressible in words or concepts. Although the Buddha Shakyamuni gave many teachings on ultimate truth, he recognized that were he only to give teachings on ultimate truth, the vast majority of sentient beings would neither be able to understand them nor be able to make spiritual progress based upon them.

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